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NOVEMBER 2008
Waste Management fined for West Hawaii
Landfill violations
The United States Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) announced a settlement
with Waste Management of Hawaii,
Inc. and the County of Hawaii for
$33,500 in fines and at least $184,400
for a beneficial environmental project
after violating the Clean Air Act
at the West Hawaii Landfill at Waikaloa.
The supplemental environmental project
will address the ongoing smoldering
conditions at the closed Kona landfill
by conducting heat mapping of the
site for a future landfill-wide fire
suppression program. The project
will also test the effectiveness
of proven landfill fire suppression
techniques using fire-retardant foam
that could be used at the Kona site.
Finally, air monitoring will be done
around the Kona landfill to assess
any potential impacts from the smoldering
landfill.
“We’re pleased that, in resolving
the West Hawaii Landfill violations,
the combustion issues at the closed
Kona Landfill will also be addressed,”
said Deborah Jordan, director for
the EPA Pacific Southwest region’s
air division.
Since 2001, Waste Management and
the County of Hawaii have violated
air testing and monitoring reporting
requirements for hazardous air pollutants
and volatile organics at the West
Hawaii Landfill.
The West Hawaii Landfill at Waikaloa
on the Big Island is owned by the
County of Hawaii and run and operated
for the county by Waste Management
of Hawaii, Inc. Staff from the Hawaii
Department of Health’s Clean Air
Branch and the Solid and Hazardous
Waste Branch provided assistance
to the EPA’s investigators. In addition,
staff from the California Integrated
Waste Management Board assisted in
the development of the environmental
project.
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